• Photo
Sweden's Ringhals atomic power station near Varberg, Sweden

Sweden's Ringhals atomic power station near Varberg, Sweden, Thursday, June 21, 2012. (AP Photo/Bjorn Larsson Rosvall)

  • More International News
A week of top AP photos
A week of top AP photos

This gallery contains images published May 3 - 9, 2013

Bangladesh workers find survivor in factory rubble
Workers find survivor in factory rubble

A woman buried in the wreckage of a collapsed garment factory …

UN predicts boom in trade of 'green' products
UN predicts 'green' product trade boom

The U.N.'s environment agency says the global market for …

A week of top AP photos
A week of top AP photos

This gallery contains images published April 25 - May 2, 2013.

Obama: North Korea has failed again
Obama: North Korea has failed again

President Barack Obama said Tuesday that North Korea can no …

Advertisement

Swedish police baffled by explosives near nukes

Sweden increased its security alert

Updated: Friday, 22 Jun 2012, 8:49 AM EDT
Published : Friday, 22 Jun 2012, 7:39 AM EDT

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Two days after nuclear officials found a small amount of explosives on a forklift on the grounds of Sweden's largest nuclear power plant, police said they still had no clues about possible perpetrators or how the material got there.

Officers completed a search of the plant's premises in the morning, but found no other explosives, police spokesman Tommy Nyman said Friday.

"There's no suspect and we're trying to find out the motive now ... how it could get in there, and why," he said.

Nuclear officials said they had received no threats.

Nyman said investigators were analyzing witness statements and security camera footage of the vehicle's movements. He declined to give more details.

Power utility Vattenfall said the clay-like, fist-sized explosive was found on a fire extinguisher in the forklift during a routine check as it entered the high-security enclosure, where the four reactors are situated, from the plant's adjoining industrial area.

"To me, it looked like the size of a fist," Ringhals spokesman Gosta Larsen said, noting that the small gray mass would have been difficult to spot if the sniffer-dogs had not found it.

There was no danger of explosion because the material did not have a detonator or triggering device, police and nuclear officials said. They insisted that even if it had exploded, the damage would have been minimal and would not have affected the plant.

Police combed the outer enclosure of the Ringhals plant — an area the size of 150 football fields — but found no indication that the explosive had been brought in through or over the surrounding fencing, Gith Thedvall, a local police spokeswoman, said.

"So it must have been brought in by someone who came through the control gates," she said, referring to the gates at the plant's outer enclosure.

Wednesday's incident prompted Sweden to increase its security alert at the country's three nuclear plants, including Forsmark and Oskarshamn.

Police temporarily cordoned off the area immediately surrounding the forklift, but the find did not cause any other exceptional measures at the plant, officials said.

"It's serious that someone tries to bring in explosives to a nuclear plant," Larsen said. "But it was a really stupid thing to do because there's a 100 percent certainty that it would have been discovered. It would never have made its way through."

Critics slammed the plant and Sweden's nuclear industry after the incident, saying it shows how vulnerable atomic power stations are.

David Persson, a spokesman at the Swedish Radiation Safety Authority, said the agency considers the incident serious but doesn't want to draw any conclusions or plan to tighten its guidelines or rules until police have established what actually happened.

"We're following this closely. There definitely shouldn't be any explosive materials near a nuclear plant, but it's positive that they found it," Persson said.

The United Nations nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said it was aware of the incident and was in touch with Swedish authorities but declined to comment further.

The Swedish government has not commented on the incident, saying that it would wait for the outcome of the police investigation.

Ringhals, with more than 3,500 workers, is Sweden's largest power plant, producing 28 Terawatt-Hours a year, or supplying around 20 percent of the country's electricity.

It is located near Varberg in Halland, some 70 kilometers (45 miles) south of Sweden's second-largest city, Goteborg.

  • Comments

Comments WLFI.com is migrating to a more stable commenting system called DISQUS. This system is used by CNN, TIME, FOX News, numerous blogging sites and has over 75 Million registered users. Unfortunately we can't migrate our current user accounts to this new system.

To sign up for a DISQUS account, click the DISQUS button just below and to the right and then click Login.

DISQUS lets you login with several different options, including Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo or OpenID. We expect it to allow more conversation and better moderation. If you have any questions, please feel free to comment below.

 

blog comments powered by Disqus

Advertisement
Advertisement